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Saturday, April 21, 2018

The HINDU Notes – 21st April 2018

13:22





📰 Congress, six other parties move to impeach CJI Misra

Congress, six other parties move to impeach CJI Misra
Motion submitted to Vice-President cites five cases of ‘misbehaviour’

•The Congress, supported by six other Opposition parties in the Rajya Sabha, on Friday took the unprecedented step of moving an impeachment motion against Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra on grounds of ‘misbehaviour’ and levelled five charges against him.

•It is the first time a sitting Chief Justice will face an impeachment notice in India’s constitutional history.

71 signatures

•Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Ghulam Nabi Azad, accompanied by a few colleagues, submitted the petition with 71 signatures to Rajya Sabha Chairman M. Venkaiah Naidu. Mr Azad, however, mentioned that seven of the signatories had retired as Rajya Sabha members.

•Former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and former Finance Minister P. Chidambaram did not sign the petition. The Congress, however, denied any rift in the party and claimed the move had Dr Singh’s “concurrence.”

•The notice comes a day after the Supreme Court rejected a clutch of petitions seeking a probe into the circumstances surrounding the death of judge B.H. Loya, who was hearing the Sohrabuddin Sheikh encounter case in which BJP president Amit Shah was an accused. The court held that Loya had died of “natural causes”.

•The Congress, however, insisted that the move was not linked to the verdict in the Loya case.

📰 Impeachment move doesn’t fetter CJI, say experts

Impeachment move doesn’t fetter CJI, say experts
R.M. Lodha and K.G. Balakrishnan call for a review of the process to remove judges, seek serious deliberation on introducing alternative steps

•Former Chief Justices of India and eminent jurists said on Friday that there was no need for Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra to withdraw from work merely because a group of Opposition MPs had submitted a notice for his impeachment to the Rajya Sabha Chairman.

•Both the Constitution and the Judges (Inquiry) Act of 1968 are silent on whether a judge facing impeachment motion should recuse from judicial and administrative work till he is cleared of the charges against him. This is the first time that a Chief Justice of India is facing an impeachment motion.

•Former Chief Justice of India K.G. Balakrishnan, who described Chief Justice Misra as a “naturally capable” judge, said the CJI remained unaffected by the impeachment move of the Opposition parties.

•“Neither the law nor propriety requires the CJI to withdraw from work. Until the Rajya Sabha Chairman makes up his mind to admit the motion and refer it to an Inquiry Committee under the 1968 Act, things will be as usual for the CJI,” N.R. Madhava Menon, eminent legal academician and founder-director of National Judicial Academy, Bhopal, said.

•Former Solicitor-General of India Mohan Parasaran said, “Just because a motion is moved, why should he [CJI Misra] actually cease to do his work. Otherwise, tomorrow any 50 MPs can sign an impeachment motion and hold the judiciary to ransom.”

•Former Chief Justice of India R.M. Lodha said it was the CJI’s call whether or not to withdraw from work voluntarily.

‘Tough call’

•“One thing is sure, it will be difficult for the CJI to discharge his duties as expected of a CJI while the impeachment notice is hanging over his head. It will be very stressful. It will be a tough call exercising his authority,” Justice Lodha said.

•Former Attorney-General Mukul Rohatgi called the impeachment notice a “cheap tactic” to intimidate Chief Justice Misra and denigrate the institution.

Review of decision

•The jurists are, however, divided on whether a decision by the Rajya Sabha Chairman to refuse the impeachment motion would be judicially reviewable.

•Justice Lodha said the decision of the Chairman was open to judicial scrutiny. He said impeachment was a “legislative process where a decision thereon is amenable to judicial scrutiny”, and added that the Chairman’s decision was not protected by parliamentary privilege.

•Mr. Parasaran differed, saying the Chairman’s decision to refuse or admit the motion would be hit by parliamentary privilege.

•Justice Balakrishnan also dismissed any fears of the Rajya Sabha Chairman “sitting on” the impeachment motion, waiting till Chief Justice Misra retires on October 2 this year and the motion becoming infructuous.

•“He [Chairman] is a constitutional authority. This motion is made by over 60 MPs. The Chairman cannot refuse the motion on flimsy grounds. He cannot delay and let uncertainty continue. He has to decide within a reasonable time,” the former CJI said.

•Justices Lodha and Balakrishnan, however, agreed that impeachment as a process to remove judges required a re-look. “For 60 years, it has not worked wherever it was needed. It requires serious deliberation on what alternative measures can be employed to bring an end to the matter,” Justice Lodha said.

📰 Cabinet to discuss death penalty for rape of minors

Final decision on Ordinance to be taken at meeting today

•Following a nationwide uproar over the rape of two minors in Kathua and Unnao, the Union Cabinet could, in its meeting on Saturday, take a decision on bringing an Ordinance to award death penalty to those convicted of sexually assaulting a child.

•Law Ministry sources say that they have approved a proposal received from the Ministry of Women and Child Development (MoWCD) to amend the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, 2012, and a final decision on whether to bring it in the form of an Ordinance will be taken at the Cabinet meeting.

Draft Cabinet note

•Last week, WCD Minister Maneka Gandhi had said that her Ministry will amend the POSCO Act to ensure death penalty for sexual assaults on children up to 12 years. Subsequently, a draft Cabinet note was prepared and sent to the Law Ministry.

•According to a senior Ministry official, the draft Cabinet note proposes an amendment to Section 6 of the POCSO Act, which lays down a punishment of 10 years to life imprisonment for aggravated penetrative sexual assault against children.

•On Friday, the Centre also informed the Supreme Court that it is actively considering amending the penal law to introduce death penalty to those convicted of sexually abusing children up to 12 years of age.

📰 Checks against atrocities

The task of balancing penal law enforcement and civil liberties is best left to Parliament

•The Supreme Court, in its recent judgment in Subhash Kashinath Mahajan v. State of Maharashtra , has stirred up a debate which is bound to impact the law and policy on the prohibition of the practice of untouchability and prevention of atrocities against Scheduled Castes (SCs) and Scheduled Tribes (STs) in India.

What data show

•The empirical question of whether the Scheduled Castes and the Scheduled Tribes (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989 is really being misused by the filing of false cases (which is the basis for the judgment) needs to be addressed by looking at the available data.

•While it is true, as contended before the court, that National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) data show that 5,347 false cases involving SCs and 912 false cases involving STs were registered in 2016, it should be noted that these constituted only 9% and 10%, respectively, of the total number of cases that were to be investigated by the police in that year. This would suggest that only about one out of 10 cases filed is false.

•The question that arises is whether the imposition of severe restrictions, on registration and arrest, for all cases under the Act is justified. The other facts sought to be canvassed before the court appear to be more anecdotal than based on concrete statistical data. Thus, there appears to be little evidence that the Act is being rampantly misused. On the contrary, there is plenty of evidence to support the view that the SCs/STs are victims of rising crime each year. NCRB data show that in the past 10 years, crimes against SCs have risen by 51% (27,070 cases in 2006 and 40,801 crimes in 2016 were reported). Against STs it was by 13% (5,791 in 2006 and 6,568 cases in 2016 were reported). Studies by the National Law School of India University and Action Aid India have shown that religious, social and other disabilities involving the practice of untouchability continue to be widespread in India. Thus, there is much empirical evidence to support the stand that the Act needs to be strengthened — not weakened.

Inadequate enforcement

•Legislation on untouchability and atrocities against SCs/STs arguably constitutes a radical departure from the usual approach of the criminal justice system. Unlike other offences, untouchability is an offence under the Constitution — Article 17 prescribes that ‘the enforcement of any disability arising out of untouchability shall be an offence punishable in accordance with law’. Along with Articles 14, 21 and the rest of them, Article 17 is thus exalted to the position of a fundamental right However, despite the laws, it is generally accepted that Article 17 has not succeeded in achieving its mandate largely due to inadequate enforcement, in turn leading to low conviction rates and a huge pendency of cases.

•Consequently, the legislative trend has been to progressively make the penal law tougher. In 2016, several amendments were introduced to strengthen the 1989 Act such as: including more acts as atrocities; increasing the quantum of punishment for the offences defined as atrocities; imposing an enhanced duty on public servants such as police officers who are required to enforce the Act; constituting special and exclusive courts to try offences under the Act; introducing time limits for investigation and trial; providing enhanced state machinery for arrest, investigation and trial; using presumptions to make convictions easier; and detailed regulation of the rights of victims and witnesses under the Act.

•A study of the enactments under the umbrella of Article 17 would leave little doubt that, as noted by the apex court in various cases, offences under the untouchability and atrocities law constitute a separate and special class of offences. Further, they signal a drastic departure from the normal approach to criminal justice. A study of the constitutional and legislative history relating to SCs/STs would reveal a unique jurisprudence that has evolved on the subject, which mandates a radically different and stronger approach to be adopted by the criminal justice system. In this context, the recent decision by the Supreme Court might be seen to run counter to the legislative trend of making the untouchability and atrocities laws harsher and tougher rather than softer.





•The court’s judgment is noteworthy for reminding us that the untouchability and atrocities laws, in its zeal to make the penal law stricter and more effective in the prosecution of offenders, cannot violate basic civil liberties as enshrined in Articles 21 and 22 (liberties articulated by a number of judges in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India ).

Possible solutions

•Even if the ruling on anticipatory bail is to be welcomed as protecting the accused from needless arrest and humiliation on the one hand and as a victory for human rights on the other, whether ordinary police powers of registering a first information report and making arrests in cognisable cases should be whittled down to this extent in atrocity cases is a matter of deliberation. False and frivolous complaints filed under untouchability legislation could also have been dealt with by other means which include directions for prompt investigation and prosecution of such offences by the police and others under the Indian Penal Code, 1860. It might have been more appropriate to have left the delicate balancing act between the enforcement of penal laws and the protection of civil liberties to Parliament, the body entrusted with the task of making our laws.

📰 Mission impossible

The proposal for simultaneous elections involves too many practical difficulties

•The idea of holding simultaneous elections to the Lok Sabha and the State Assemblies appears to have caught the imagination of the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government at the Centre. Prime Minister Narendra Modi has been talking about this for some time now. It is not too much of a leap to surmise that he believes that voters are likely to back the same party in both elections, and that in the absence of a national alternative to his candidature at the Centre, such a voting pattern may help the BJP across States too. The Law Commission’s move to seek the opinion of the public, political parties, academicians and other stakeholders, on the proposal appears to be aimed at giving concrete shape to this political viewpoint. The Commission has released a three-page summary of its draft working paper, setting out the amendments that may be required in the Constitution and electoral laws. It proposes to put together a report to forward to the Centre after getting the views of the public. Among its “possible recommendations” is a “constructive vote of no-confidence”: while expressing lack of confidence in one government, members of the legislature will have to repose trust in an alternative. It also suggests that premature dissolution of the House could be avoided if all members sit together and elect a leader. This would entail a temporary waiver of the anti-defection law so that members could help form a stable government without the fear of disqualification. However, these are reforms that can be adopted even if simultaneous elections are not held.

•In principle, simultaneous elections to the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies have the benefits of saving poll expenditure and helping ruling parties focus on governance instead of being constantly in election mode. The flip side is that it is nearly impossible to implement, as it would mean arbitrarily curtailing or extending the term of existing legislatures to bring their election dates in line with the due date for the rest of the country. This would be the most difficult change to execute, as such a measure would undermine federalism as well as representative democracy. The Commission has suggested an alternative: categorise States based on proximity to the next general election, and have one round of State Assembly polls with the next Lok Sabha election, and another round for the remaining States 30 months later. This would mean that India would have a set of elections every two and a half years. But governments have been brought down or have collapsed on their own, leading to mid-term polls in different States and even at the Centre in different years. Given the difficulties involved in shifting to simultaneous elections, we may have to live with the reality that some part of the country will go to polls every few months.

📰 Prosperity in the 21st century

Economic reforms without a robust agricultural growth may not have reduced urban poverty

•A case for bringing the issue of poverty to the centre stage of public policy has recently been made by two of India’s prominent economists. In their article, “How the data sets stack up” ( The Hindu , Editorial page, April 4), C. Rangarajan and S. Mahendra Dev suggest that since the publication of Thomas Piketty’sCapital in the Twenty-First Century global attention may have got somewhat disproportionately focussed on the issue of inequality, crowding out attention to poverty. They argue that poverty is an important indicator of a country’s development on its own.

Levelling up

•This is an important intervention to have made, for we can see from the histories of different parts of the world that the relationship between the movements in poverty and inequality is not unique. In particular, we find from the Indian experience that there are instances in which a public policy focussed on the reduction of inequality may not result in the elimination of poverty. Essentially, inequality can be reduced by taxing the rich, a form of ‘levelling down’, but poverty can be permanently eliminated only by raising the incomes of the poor, a form of ‘levelling up’.

•Not only has public policy in India paid far too little attention to the latter but also some of the measures adopted to tackle inequality may have exacerbated poverty here. The long-term strategy should be to tackle these two jointly through the equalisation of capabilities. However, in the short-term, public policy must address livelihood opportunities for the poor, the exact implication of which for inequality is not always obvious. The experience of poverty for an individual is not necessarily the same as that of inequality, and poverty reduction often requires particular attention. The article by Professors Rangarajan and Dev serves to remind us of this. The scale of poverty in India remains massive. The Planning Commission had estimated it at 363 million in 2011-12 ( Report of the Expert Group to Review the Methodology for Measurement of Poverty , Chair: C. Rangarajan; henceforth ‘Planning Commission, 2014’). This is larger than the combined populations of Germany, France, the U.K., Spain and Italy, and amounted to about a third of the population of India in that year.

•To understand the drivers of poverty it is necessary to take a longer view, avoiding exclusive focus on poverty trends after 1991 as this could lead to misleading inference. For instance, Professors Rangarajan and Dev point to an accelerated reduction in poverty in India since 1991, and by implication the role of the reforms in this process. The fact of an acceleration is incontestable but the role in this development of the reforms as we understand them, as opposed to other public policy interventions, needs clarification. To get there we need first to acknowledge that poverty measured by the number of poor begins to decline in the 1980s itself. Official poverty estimates exist for two time points in the 1980s, 1983 and 1987-88. Poverty declined in both these years, 1983 being the first time ever that a decline in the number of poor was registered. The rate of decline in poverty accelerated between 1983 and 1988. But this was not to last, and the next estimate, for the year 1993-94, actually showed a mild increase. (The foregoing analysis is based on poverty estimates using the ‘Lakdawala Method’. The analysis that follows is based on poverty estimates using the ‘Tendulkar method’. Data in both cases is from ‘Planning Commission, 2014’).

Factoring in fluctuations

•It is important though to see the recorded fluctuations in poverty in perspective. Poverty estimates appear at intervals that are not always uniform, and are influenced by the prevailing prices as consumption expenditure is adjusted for price movements. Despite this we have reason to believe that the recorded rise in poverty in 1993-94 need not be an artefact for the estimated number of poor rises further, though marginally, in 2004-05. It is only the estimate for 2009-10 that shows a decline in the number of poor in India once again. This is followed by a quite spectacular decline over the next two years. To get an idea of the magnitude of the decline, the numbers for 2004-05, 2009-10 and 2011-12 are 407 million, 355 million and 270 million, respectively. So while it is correct say that poverty had declined rapidly since the reforms, it actually declines only after about one and a half decades from 1991.

•Though the extent of poverty reduction over the period 2009-10 to 2011-12 is very high by historical standards, it is not altogether implausible. When we understand this, we are also able to see the potential of the reforms as understood for poverty reduction. The plausibility of the recorded decline in poverty is based on the fact that it comes soon after a period when growth itself in India was fastest ever, the five-year period from 2003-04 onwards. In three of these years growth came close to breaching the double-digit barrier. More crucially, however, the reduction took place when agricultural growth was at its fastest ever. Bipin Deokar and S.L. Shetty have estimated average annual agricultural growth at 4% during 2005-06 to 2013-14 compared to 2.5% for the decade prior to this. A 60% increase in the rate of growth of agriculture sustained for a reasonably long stretch is likely to have impacted poverty significantly. Similarly, the 1980s, when poverty reduction first accelerated, had also been a period of accelerated agricultural growth.

•The relative roles of the reforms and agricultural growth in driving poverty-reduction after 1991 are clear from the differential trends of rural and urban poverty. It is only after 2004-05 that we see for the first time ever a reduction in the number of the urban poor. Till that date this figure has steadily risen while rural poverty had resumed its downward trend after 1993-94 itself. This places the role of the reforms in perspective. The economic reforms had mainly focussed on trade, industry and financial sector reforms. Activity in these sectors is mostly based in urban areas. For well over a decade after 1991 it had not succeeded in reducing the number of urban poor. It is only after the agricultural sector began to grow faster from around the middle of the next one that the number of urban poor begins to decline.

Question of reforms

•Two processes are likely to have been at play in this. Rural prosperity could have fuelled demand for urban products and, following the significant decline in rural poverty, migration from the villages, swelling the numbers of the urban poor, may have slowed. The role of agricultural growth in reducing poverty is apparent in the fact that between 2004-05 and 2009-10 the number of rural poor declined by 15% while the number of urban poor declined only by 5%. This points to the possibility that economic reforms without a robust agricultural growth may not have made much of a difference to urban poverty. The faster growth of agriculture itself came due to sector-specific public policy that was not a subset of what has come to be understood as reforms, defined by liberalisation of the policy regime. The relevant policies have been identified as increased public investment, faster rate of growth of credit for private investment and the launching of the National Horticulture Mission. Strategies for the elimination of poverty are advisedly based on the historical record rather than the promise of “more reforms”.




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SBI PO 2018 Notification PDF Download (Official)

08:15




Applications are invited from eligible Indian Citizens for appointment as Probationary Officers (POs) in State Bank of India. Candidates selected are liable to be posted anywhere in India



IMPORTANT DATES:
  • Start Date of online application: 21/04/2018
  • Last Date of online application: 13/05/2018
  • Prelims Admit Card:18.06.2018
  • Prelims Exam: 1,7,8, July 2018
  • Prelims Result: 15.07.2018
  • Mains Admit Card: 20.07.2018
  • Mains Exam: 04.08.2018
  • Mains Result: 20.08.2018
  • Interview Admit Card: 01.09.2018
  • Interview & GDPI: 24.09.18 to 12.10.18
  • Final Result: 01.11.2018
Fees: 600 for Gen/obc and 100/- others

Educational Qualification: Graduation in any stream

Age: 21-30 Years

Salary: 8 to 13 Lakhs (Approx)

Click Here to Download Official Notification of SBI PO 2018 

Click Here to apply Online for SBI PO 2018



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THE HINDU NEWSPAPER IMPORTANT ARTICLES 21.04.2018

Daily Current Affairs, 20th April 2018

08:10






1)  Smriti Irani Launches GNFC’s Neem Project In UP
•State-run Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilizers & Chemicals Limited (GNFC) started its socio-economic Neem Project, inaugurated by Union Minister Smriti Irani in Amethi District of Uttar Pradesh. GNFC intends to collect 8,000 to 10,000 MT Neem seeds from the State.

•Since 2015, GNFC, through its Neem Project has collected over 45,000 tonnes of neem seeds by engaging 4.5 lakh rural women in over 60 districts of five states including Gujarat, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka and Rajasthan.

2)  India Forms Committee To Reform Higher Defence Planning
•The Union Government formed a new integrated institutional mechanism, Defence Planning Committee (DPC) to reform the process of higher defence planning. The permanent body would be chaired by National Security Advisor Ajit Doval.

•The committee is aimed at driving the country’s military and national security strategy, draft capability development plans and guide and accelerate defence equipment acquisitions. The Chief of Integrated Defence Staff to the Chairman of the Chief of the Staff Committee (CISC) will be the member secretary of the committee.

3)  Gujarat Launches Pocket Cop Project
•The Gujarat police unveiled the Pocket Cop project, which will enable quicker verification of passport applicants, and search of accused persons, among others. The project was inaugurated by Chief Minister Vijay Rupani in Gandhinagar.

•Under the project, smartphones with data connectivity will be given to 4,900 police personnel, including every police station in-charge, investigating officer, PCR van, and those involved in passport verification.

4)  Bangalore Emerges As Top City For Office Expansion: CBRE
•In India, Bangalore has emerged as the most preferred city for office expansion, according to a survey by real estate consulting firm, CBRE South Asia. 

•MNCs are focusing on expanding in Bangalore and smaller cities across the country, but have limited growth plans in the Delhi NCR and Mumbai, according to the CBRE Asia Pacific Occupier Survey 2018.

5)  Swaziland King Changes Country's Name To 'Kingdom Of ESwatini'
•Swaziland’s King Mswati III, Africa’s last absolute monarch, officially changed the name of his country to the ‘Kingdom of eSwatini’. Accordingly, the country, a member of the Commonwealth, will now be known by its historic name of eSwatini.

•The announcement was made during the Golden Jubilee celebrations of the King’s 50th birthday as well as the 50th anniversary of Swazi’s independence from British colonial rule.

6)  US Senate Narrowly Confirms Trump's New NASA Chief
•Jim Bridenstine, a congressman from Oklahoma, US Navy veteran, and former pilot, was confirmed on a 50-49 vote and will become the 13th administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) seven months after Trump named him to lead the agency.

•Bridenstine, 42, has expressed an interest in returning humans back to the moon, spoken of closer ties between NASA and the commercial space industry, and has voiced skepticism about human-caused climate change.

7)  Daniel Ricciardo Wins Chinese Grand Prix 2018
•The 2018 Chinese Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race that took place at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China. Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo won the race ahead of Valtteri Bottas and Kimi Raikkonen.

•The race was the third round of the 2018 FIA Formula One World Championship and marked the fifteenth time that the Chinese Grand Prix has been run as a round of the Formula One World Championship.




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Friday, April 20, 2018

Target 2018 Reports And Indices pdf

11:30






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The HINDU Notes – 20th April 2018

11:20





📰 No deal on illegal migrants

Discussions likely to continue at the Home Secretary-level

•The failure of Britain and India to sign a key memorandum of understanding on the return of illegal migrants during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit on Wednesday has been greeted with surprise, as the agreement was seen as a key element of the visit.

•As recently as January, the MoU, which would have updated a previous agreement that expired in 2014, was pegged as one of the central pieces of the bilateral visit, building on an issue repeatedly raised by Britain. During her visit to India in 2016, British Prime Minister Theresa May said the U.K. would consider an improved visa deal, “if, at the same time, we can step up the speed and volume of returns of Indians with no right to remain in the U.K.”

•During a visit by Commerce and Industry Minister Suresh Prabhu and Minister of State for Home Affairs Kiren Rijiju, it appeared that an agreement on the terms of the memorandum had been reached, with plans for the Memo to be signed during the prime ministerial visit. The signing — which would have been seen as a gesture of goodwill from India — would have placed the onus on Britain to deliver on Indian requests around visas for professionals and students, thereby making a crucial breakthrough in issues that have presented challenges to the bilateral relationship.

•“The returns issue is very important,” an MEA spokesperson had said in a briefing in New Delhi ahead of the visit, pointing to a national portal that enabled the identification of nationality, that would enable someone’s status to be swiftly verified once someone had been identified as illegal by Britain. “So this is already in place and the agreement that we are looking at is a continuation of what we have agreed before.”

Matter of contention

•However, it is understood that a failure to reach an agreement on the numbers of returns and the speed at which they would be required to be returned led to hopes of a swift deal being reached fading. A source suggested Britain’s expectations on these issues were beyond the level India was willing to commit to. Discussions on the issue are expected to continue at Home Secretary level next month.

•Last year, the British Home Office was caught up in a controversy after data based on a new system of exit checks at Britain’s border found that just over 4,600 international students were overstaying their visa, compared to roughly 1,00,000 that had been suggested by an International Passenger Survey that the government had been relying on to date.

•“The whole point of the better economic closer relationship between India and the U.K. was predicated on greater visas access which in turn was predicated on the return of illegal migrants, estimates on the numbers of which varies dramatically, so it doesn’t look good for the pace of growing economic ties,” said Gareth Price, a South Asia expert at Chatham House.

•The MoU would also have come at a politically sensitive time for Britain, amid questions about its treatment of the “Windrush generation” — men and women from the Caribbean who came to the U.K. between the late 1940s and early 1970s, many as children, before U.K. legislation no longer gave Commonwealth citizens the automatic right to reside in Britain.

•Recent toughening up of immigration requirements has resulted in some being wrongly denied access to public services and threatened with deportation, or even deported, despite being British citizens.

•Though this controversy pertains to British citizens rather than illegal migrants, the government has faced wider questions around its treatment of Commonwealth citizens, particularly as it pegs the Commonwealth as a route for post-Brexit trade to flourish.

•“I would presume Britain will have to come to terms that with this talk of free trade, the quid pro quo is greater access not more restricted access for people: the Windrush issue and the Indian [illegal returns memo] issue have suggested Britain wanted to go in the other direction, so putting it all together we are not going to get what we want when we have the focus on tightening up immigration,” said Mr. Price.

📰 PIL has become an ‘industry of vested interests’: SC

Supreme Court says it is a travesty of justice for the resources of the legal system to be consumed by an avalanche of misdirected public interest petitions

•The Supreme Court on Thursday derided the Loya PIL petitions as a case in point of how public interest litigation has become an “industry of vested interests” rather than a powerful tool to espouse the cause of the marginalised and oppressed.

•A Bench of Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra and Justices A.M. Khanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachud said the essential aspect of a genuine PIL petition was that the “person who moves the court has no personal interest in the outcome of the proceedings, apart from a general standing as a citizen before the court.”

•The PIL was envisioned by the Supreme Court’s legendary judges as “a powerful instrument to preserve the rule of law and to ensure the accountability of and transparency within structures of governance”.

Reality check

•Justice Chandrachud, who authored the verdict, said it was time for the judiciary to do a reality check on the advent of PIL petitions which flooded the courts.

•The judgment said PIL had now become a façade for people hungry for publicity or those who wanted to settle personal, business or political scores. The true face of the litigant behind the façade was seldom unravelled.

•“It is a travesty of justice for the resources of the legal system to be consumed by an avalanche of misdirected petitions purportedly filed in the public interest which, upon due scrutiny, are found to promote a personal, business or political agenda. This has spawned an industry of vested interests in litigation,” Justice Chandrachud observed.

•This “avalanche” would cost the judiciary and other democratic institutions dearly. The PIL had already “seriously denuded the efficacy of the judicial system by detracting from the ability of the court to devote its time and resources to cases which legitimately require attention.”

•“Business rivalries have to be resolved in a competitive market for goods and services. Political rivalries have to be resolved in the great hall of democracy when the electorate votes its representatives in and out of office. Courts resolve disputes about legal rights and entitlements. Courts protect the rule of law,” the Supreme Court observed.

•Judicial process would be reduced to a charade if nothing is done to close the floodgates of PILs, the court said.

📰 Aadhaar does not record caste or race, says SC judge

The Act has given privacy: Justice Chandrachud

•The Aadhaar Act does not record the caste, religion, race, etc., of individuals, thus ensuring that these demographics are not used to discriminate among citizens, Justice D.Y. Chandrachud observed during the Constitution Bench hearing in the Aadhaar case on Thursday.

•“Race, caste, religion, etc are not part of demographics required. These are aspects which can be used to discriminate... by excluding them, the Act has given privacy,” Justice Chandrachud addressed UIDAI, the nodal agency for implementing the Aadhaar scheme.

•Justice Chandrachud had, in August 2017, authored the historic verdict for the nine-judge Constitution Bench, which declared that privacy was intrinsic to life and liberty and an inherent part of the fundamental rights enshrined in the Constitution.

•The judgment had held that privacy is a natural right that inheres in human beings. The state does not bestow natural rights on citizens. Natural rights like privacy exist equally in all individuals, irrespective of class, strata, gender or orientation.

•The nine-judge Bench pronounced the verdict on a reference from a five-judge Bench deciding the Aadhaar petitions. The reference was on the question whether privacy was a fundamental right and inviolable.

•Senior advocate Rakesh Dwivedi argued that citizens have no right to privacy as far as demographic details are concerned. Demographic details are the name of the person, age, etc.

•Justice Chandrachud summarised Mr. Dwivedi’s submissions, saying the latter meant that there were four levels of identification – demographics, optional demographics, biometrics and core biometrics like fingerprints and iris scans. “What you are saying is that there is a reasonable expectation of privacy in core biometrics, but as you veer away from core biometrics, your reasonable expectation of privacy does not count,” Justice Chandrachud paraphrased Mr. Dwivedi’s submissions.

•Mr. Dwivedi said the UIDAI does not share core biometrics at all. However, Justice A.K. Sikri pointed out that the petitioners are still apprehensive about the aggregation of personal data in a central storage facility, and their leak. “We are concerned with real apprehensions. People who are scared of water, they will never enter the pool... What can we do?” Mr. Dwivedi responded.

📰 The Hadiya caution

The case showed us how courts too can be propelled by impulses entirely opposed to the Constitution

•One of the sorriest episodes in India’s judicial history was finally brought to an end in March with the Supreme Court judgment in Shafin Jahan v. Asokan K.M.,or the Hadiya case as we’ve come to know it. Through two separate but concurring opinions, one written by Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra, for himself and Justice A.M. Khanwilkar, and the other by Justice D.Y. Chandrachud, the court has reversed a most reprehensible ruling by the Kerala High Court. Yet, a collective reading of these opinions, released in a detailed order last week, tells us only a part of the story.

•The judgment aims to speak in stirring language. It focuses attention on the centrality of individual freedom and autonomy under India’s constitutional scheme. “It is obligatory to state here that expression of choice in accord with law is acceptance of individual identity,” the CJI writes, in his characteristically fustian style. “Curtailment of that expression and the ultimate action emanating therefrom on the conceptual structuralism of obeisance to the societal will destroy the individualistic entity of a person. The social values and morals have their space but they are not above the constitutionally guaranteed freedom.”

No apology

•But this bombast veils the Supreme Court’s own conduct in the case. The opinions do not offer anything resembling an apology for the court having allowed a savagely degrading process of decision-making to fester for far longer than it should have. Indeed, the entire case from its inception had been marked by a sense of tragedy. The tale it tells is depressing: that the courts, designed under our democratic scheme to act as a bastion of fundamental rights, are just as capable as the other wings of government in enforcing the most wrenching forms of paternalism.

•It was in January 2016 when Mr. Asokan first approached the Kerala High Court. His grievance was that his daughter, who was born a Hindu, with the given name Akhila, and who had later converted to Islam, taking the name Hadiya, was being illegally detained against her wishes. But the court initially rejected these claims. Ms. Hadiya, it held, was staying at a hostel run by the “Markazul Hidaya Sathyasarani Educational & Charitable Trust” entirely of her own volition.

•However, in August that year, Mr. Asokan once again went to the High Court, this time on an apparent apprehension that Ms. Hadiya was likely to be “transported out of the country”. When the petition was still being heard, in December, she married Shafin Jahan. Just months later though, on May 24, 2017, the High Court granted Mr. Asokan her custody, and, what’s more, annulled her marriage with Mr. Jahan altogether.

•At play here was an inexplicable show of moralism. “A girl aged 24 years is weak and vulnerable, capable of being exploited in many ways,” the Bench wrote. “This Court exercisingparens patriaejurisdiction is concerned with the welfare of a girl of her age. The duty cast on this Court to ensure the safety of at least the girls who are brought before it can be discharged only by ensuring that Ms. Akhila is in safe hands.”

•Even intuitively there are two clear problems with this judgment: one, Ms. Hadiya wasn’t a girl, but was an adult woman making her own choices on how she wanted to lead her life; two, Kerala, unlike some other States that have dangerously draconian anti-conversion laws, does not prevent an adult from converting to a different religion, or from marrying a person of different faith.

A slow process

•Astoundingly, though, when Mr. Jahan approached the Supreme Court against this verdict, the court didn’t quite deem it necessary to grant Ms. Hadiya the bare dignity of a hearing, to ask her what she might have wanted. To the Supreme Court, much like it was to the Kerala High Court, she was only a girl; she simply couldn’t be trusted to do the right thing.

•When the appeal first came up for hearing, the court also didn’t so much as venture to wonder how the Kerala High Court could get things so badly wrong, how it could have annulled a marriage in a proceeding for habeas corpus. It should have been obvious to the court that when judges introduce their own set of restrictions on liberty, not only do they impinge on principles of separation of powers, but they also violate their pledge to bear true faith and allegiance to the Constitution.

•Instead, the Supreme Court Bench, presided at the time by CJI J.S. Khehar, unleashed the might of the National Investigation Agency (NIA) on the parties, directing the authority to probe into the case. The order, though, was silent on what the scope of this inquiry might be, in the process effectively granting the NIA a carte blanche, allowing it to wander where it pleased, well beyond its statutory limitations.

•Eventually, it was only in late October last year — when the bench was headed by Chief Justice Misra — that the court finally called for a hearing from Ms. Hadiya. When it listened to her, it became clear to the court that she’d made her own choices, making the judgment that has now followed essentially unexceptionable. After all, it oughtn’t to have required much in the way of analysis to see that the Kerala High Court’s verdict was not only flawed, but that it had resulted in a flagrant miscarriage of justice.

Reaffirming principles

•Habeas corpus has its origins in British common law, predating even Magna Carta. The idea behind the writ is to direct a detainee’s presence in court so as to help the court understand if there was any legal justification for the person’s imprisonment. The court’s role, therefore, when a petition for habeas corpus is filed is narrow. It is only, as Chief Justice Misra writes, “to see that the detenue is produced before it, find out about his/her independent choice and see to it that the person is released from illegal restraint.” When exercising this power, the court, the CJI holds, has to remember that an individual’s decisions must be respected. If it becomes clear that a person isn’t being held against her wishes, “the enquiry and determination have to come to an end.”

•But as routine as this verdict has ultimately proved to be, perhaps given the times that we live in, it was important that the court reaffirmed certain principles that lie at the heart of the Constitution: that, for instance, an adult person, possessing the ability to act out of her own will, should be allowed responsibility for her own life. After all, the Constitution affords protection to individual autonomy, to the intimate decisions that a person might make, whether they relate to speech, sex, marriage, procreation or religion. The state, which includes the judiciary, cannot interfere in these matters of personal foundation in a bid to enforce a collective ethical judgment. Individuals must be left to decide for themselves how they each want to lead their lives. A judge’s holy writ cannot be used as a means to finagle the imposition of a coercive and majoritarian vision.

•Or, as Justice Chandrachud puts it: “In deciding whether Shafin Jahan is a fit person for Hadiya to marry, the High Court has entered into prohibited terrain. Our choices are respected because they are ours. Social approval for intimate personal decisions is not the basis for recognising them. Indeed, the Constitution protects personal liberty from disapproving audiences.”

•These words, read in isolation, are no doubt rousing. But ultimately this was a case of the Supreme Court correcting errors of the judiciary’s own making. The lessons to take away from it are many. Foremost among them is this: we must recognise that our courts too can be propelled by impulses entirely opposed to the Constitution, that the glory of judicial review, prized by us all, stands on fragile ground.

📰 Under scrutiny

The proposal to bring the BCCI under the RTI reflects rising public expectation

•There is little surprise in the Law Commission of India recommendation that the Board of Control for Cricket in India be brought under the purview of the Right to Information Act. Over the years, the popular expectation that India’s cash-rich and commercially successful apex cricket body will have to make itself more transparent and accountable has been rising. While the BCCI is a private body that needs no financial help from the government, it is being increasingly recognised that it performs significant public functions. Even though a five-judge Bench of the Supreme Court in 2005 held by a 3-2 majority that the BCCI could not be termed an instrumentality of the ‘State’ under Article 12 of the Constitution, subsequent developments have ensured that the public character of its functioning is widely recognised. In recent years, especially against the backdrop of the betting scandal that hit the Indian Premier League tournament a few years ago, the view that the cricket board is functioning in an opaque manner and not entirely in the game’s interest has gained ground. The Supreme Court’s intervention led to the constitution of the Justice R.M. Lodha Committee, which recommended sweeping reforms in the board’s structure and the rules governing its administration. Many believe that implementing these reforms at both national and State levels would impart greater transparency in its functioning and lead to an overhaul of cricket administration in the country. The apex court also reaffirmed the public character of the BCCI’s functions.

•The Lodha Committee recommended that the board be treated as a public authority under the RTI Act, and the Supreme Court wanted the Law Commission to examine this suggestion. The Central Information Commission favoured the idea. The Union government has on different occasions maintained that the BCCI is a ‘national sports federation’ and, therefore, an entity that falls under the RTI Act’s ambit. However, the BCCI is not one of the national federations listed on the website of the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports. Summing up its reasoning, the Law Commission has taken into account “the monopolistic nature of the power exercised by BCCI, the de facto recognition afforded by the Government, the impact of the Board’s actions/decisions on the fundamental rights of the players, umpires and the citizenry in general” to argue that the BCCI’s functions are public in nature. The board gets no financial help directly, but the commission has argued that the tax and duty exemptions and land concessions it got would amount to indirect financing by the state. A relevant question may be whether its autonomy would suffer as a result of being brought under the RTI. It is unlikely: other national federations are under the RTI and there is no reason to believe it would be any different for the BCCI. In fact, as a complement to the structural revamp, it may redound to the game’s interest.

📰 Reviewing the Contempt of Courts Act

The Law Commission on why the Act should remain as it is

•The Contempt of Courts Act of 1971 is one of the most powerful statutes in the country. It gives the constitutional courts wide powers to restrict an individual’s fundamental right to personal liberty for “scandalising the court” or for “wilful disobedience” of any judgment, writ, direction or order.

•The offence of “scandalising the court” continues in India even though it was abolished as an offence in England and Wales long ago.

•On March 8, 2018, the Department of Justice wrote to the Law Commission of India, asking it to examine an amendment to the Act to nix “scandalising the court” as a ground for contempt and restrict contempt to only “wilful disobedience” of directions/judgments of the court.

•The Supreme Court recently published a report that noted that 568 criminal contempt cases and 96,310 civil contempt cases were found pending in the High Courts. In the Supreme Court, as of April 10, 683 civil contempt cases and 15 criminal contempt cases have been shown as pending.

•But the Law Commission has submitted a report stating that there is no point “tinkering” with the 1971 Act. The statute, it said, only lays down the procedure in contempt cases. “The powers of contempt of the Supreme Court and High Courts are independent of the Act 1971,” the report of the Commission said. The contempt powers of the higher courts are drawn from the Constitution itself.

•The Commission said that “to delete the provision relating to ‘criminal contempt’ inter alia ‘scandalising of courts’ will have no impact on the power of the Superior Courts to punish for contempt (including criminal contempt) in view of their inherent constitutional powers, as these powers are independent of statutory provisions”. Additionally, Article 142(2) enables the Supreme Court to investigate and punish any person for its contempt.

•The Law Commission informed the government that the 1971 Act was a good influence. In fact, the statute, by laying down procedure, restricts the vast authority of the courts in wielding contempt powers, it said.

•The 1971 Act contains “adequate safeguards to exclude instances which may not amount to criminal contempt” as defined under Section 2(c) of the Act 1971. The Commission said the statute has stood the test of judicial scrutiny for about five decades. It empowers the High Court to act if someone is in contempt of the subordinate courts. Diluting the Act would expose the subordinate judiciary to acts of contempt of court.

📰 Marginalised from school

The Centre must review the implementation of the Right to Education Act across the country

•Although the recent Budget session of Parliament was appallingly disrupted by the ruling party’s surrogates and Question Hour did not function most of the time, some things did work, almost on autopilot. Written questions submitted by MPs were indeed answered in writing – I got 26 of my questions admitted and answered — and while the more prestigious “starred questions” could not get asked, these “unstarred” ones have given us an instructive insight into some crucial aspects of government policy.

On education

•My questions to the Minister of Human Resource Development in the Lok Sabha on the implementation of the Right to Education Act (RTE), almost a decade after its enactment, are a case in point. The answers I received are alarming, and definitely warrant an emergency review of the implementation of the Act.

•It emerges from the Minister’s replies to me that five States (Goa, Manipur, Mizoram, Sikkim and Telangana) have not even issued notifications regarding admissions under the RTE. As readers will recall, Section 12(1)(c) of the Act mandates private unaided schools to reserve 25% of seats for children from economically weaker sections (EWS), in the age bracket of six to 14 years. This enabled economically marginalised communities to access high quality private schools, at the expense of the State. While Telangana may be excused due to its recent formation, it is unjustifiable that the other States have failed to undertake the most basic steps to implement Section 12(1)(c) of an Act passed eight years ago.

•States have to notify per-child costs to pay the private schools, on behalf of the children admitted under this provision. However, out of 29 States and seven Union Territories, only 14 have notified their per-child costs. The provision does not apply to Jammu and Kashmir and there are no private schools in Lakshadweep; therefore, as per the data provided, a shocking 20 States/UTs have still not notified the per-child costs, a blatant violation of the letter and spirit of the RTE.

•It is also shocking to note that in 2017-18, of the 15 States which submitted their reimbursement claims to the Central government, only six were approved. Many of the claims of the States were not provided funds by the Centre, as they had not notified the per-child costs. In response to my query regarding the number of children admitted, per State, under the Section 12(1)(c) in the last three years, 18 States have claimed that the question is not applicable to them, without giving any reason for this response. This could mean that in 18 States, poor children are not even benefiting under this Act. If there are no data to record the number of students being admitted, it begs the question as to how States are reimbursing private schools. The respective State governments and the Centre should clarify this specific point.





Many gaps to fill

•According to Indus Action, an organisation which works in 10 States specifically on this provision, while there are higher order issues like the methodology used by States to calculate the per-child cost and lack of coverage of ancillary costs in the reimbursements, the absence of a streamlined disbursement framework both at the Central and State levels is one of the biggest reasons that reimbursements are not processed. If the States are not provided sufficient funds, private schools would be forced to bear the costs of the children. Civil society activists have informed me of instances of schools refusing to admit children under the RTE provision, citing non-payment of dues by State governments.

•The data regarding the number of children admitted under Section 12(1)(c) of the Act, in States which provided the figures, are also distressing. The number of children studying under this provision increased by 6,12,053 from 2014-2015 to 2015-16, but by 5,02,880 from 2015-16 to 2016-17. The State of the Nation 2015 report by IIM Ahmedabad, based on official data obtained from the District Information System for Education, puts the total number of seats under this provision as 1.6 crore over the next eight years. This means that 20 lakh seats should be available annually for EWS children in private schools under the Act; however, according to the answer of the Minister, only 5-6 lakh seats are being filled on an annual basis.

•The Preamble to the Constitution states that the democratic Republic of India shall secure social, economic and political justice. Education is undoubtedly the most important element in the movement to secure this end. Although the Directive Principles of State Policy mandate the state to provide children the right to access education, and the 86th constitutional amendment and the RTE dictate its implementation, it will only be fulfilled if sincere efforts are made by the States under the guidance and prodding of a committed Centre.

•The executive is responsible for the implementation of RTE and the legislature has the duty to hold the executive accountable. Neither – judging by the evidence – has done its job properly.

•As the malaise regarding the non-implementation of the RTE is spread across the country, the Central government should immediately convene a meeting with all the State education ministers and review the implementation of the law. The RTE aimed to provide a framework for private schools to supplement the efforts of the state to uplift disadvantaged sections of society through the means of education. We need to act immediately to address the gaps in the implementation of the law. The future of our children depends on it.

📰 NSA to head new Defence panel

The committee will draft reports on national security strategy, says notification

•The new permanent higher defence management committee headed by the National Security Adviser can help improve India’s defence planning in the long term, but may end up having no noticeable impact if the present government does not return to power in 2019, several military sources and observers say.

•While some of them hailed the move to place the committee under the NSA, Ajit Doval, others said it gave the NSA an unprecedented role in the process of planning India’s security strategy.

Plan of action

•A government notification on Wednesday said the Defence Planning Committee (DPC) would prepare a draft national security strategy, develop a capability development plan and work on defence diplomacy issues and improving defence manufacturing in India. The DPC will submit its reports to the Defence Minister.

•The DPC will have the Chairman of the Chiefs of Staff Committee, three service chiefs, secretaries of the Ministries of Defence, Expenditure and Foreign Affairs as its members. The Chief of the Integrated Staff in the MOD will be the member secretary, and his headquarters will be the secretariat.

•The notification listed four sub-committees of the DPC. One will look at policy and strategy; the second will work on plans and capability development; the third on defence diplomacy; and the fourth on defence manufacturing ecosystem. Members of these sub-committees will be decided by the DPC, which is expected to hold its first meeting soon after Mr. Doval returns from Germany on April 21, officials said.

Mixed reaction

•Most observers said the DPC would be able to make no visible impact during the tenure of this government.

•“The government will be lameduck in a few months’ time. It will make no impact during this government’s tenure. If the next government is a different one, they will dump this committee,” a serving senior military officer said.

•Another officer said this the first time the NSA would be having such a direct role in planning India’s security strategy.

•“I am not saying it is right or wrong. But no NSA has had chairmanship of such a committee, with such luminaries,” he said.

•Vice-Admiral S.C.S. Bangara (Retd.), who had a ring side view of the only effort to bring military integration after Kargil conflict, said there were many good aspects to the present move.

•The Vajpayee government called off in the last moment a plan to appoint India’s first Chief of the Integrated Staff, who would have overseen theatre commands and integrated strategies for all three service arms.

•“Long ago we used to have a Defence Planning Committee but it had no clear mandate. We have had the National Security Advisory Board making reports. But none of it worked. We do not still have a national security strategy that is handed down by the government, and our acquisitions are not informed by such a laid out strategy,” he said.

📰 Should military spending be increased?

India risks its national security withlow allocations to defence spending

•For a developing country that is committed to enhancing the quality of life of its citizens, defence is usually the last thing on the nation’s mind. Yet, no government that is committed to such a cause can ignore the existing physical and psychological security threats. These threats are more than just ordinary in India, a country located in a dangerous neighbourhood and facing both internal and external threats. Comprehensive national security helps a nation attain its aspirations, and robust security is a subset of that. India has a robust military machine. However, the lack of a national security strategy, a national strategic culture and a transformational approach towards its military capability prevent it from obtaining optimum benefit from its defence expenditure.

Resource allotment

•The defence budget is increasingly looked at as a means to provide incremental resources to other sectors, since procedural delays prevent its optimum and timely expenditure. Does this mean that the resource allotment is sufficient for India’s defence spending and only mismanagement is responsible for the lack of optimisation? Far from it.

•In February, the Army transparently deposed before the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Defence and stated two pertinent things: one, 68% of its equipment was in the vintage category, and two, with the new budget allocation of 1.47% of GDP, the sustenance of at least 24 capital projects is in jeopardy. The Army received Rs. 268.2 billion for modernisation as against its demand for Rs. 445.7 billion. With the Doklam crisis and the necessity of mobilising the Siliguri-based Corps, along with other priority resources from many other sectors to make up existing deficiencies and optimise the Corps’ capability, the Army expended almost its entire allocation of the transportation budget. In January, it had no money to even hire vehicles. The revenue budget amounts to a little over 80%, leaving little for capital expenditure through which modernisation is to be executed. Drawdown of a manpower-intensive Army that consumes the revenue cannot be done overnight. Thus, even as this drawdown is seriously executed, we cannot allow modernisation to languish.

•Military security involves the development of such capability to deter potential adversaries from undertaking inimical activities that may result in forms of adventurism or even proxy interference in a nation’s affairs. The result may never translate into immediate tangible gains. Since understanding of national security at the bureaucratic and decision-making levels remains abysmal, the focus on modernisation has suffered. With huge bureaucratic controls, and a Defence Ministry with no military presence, the comprehension of priorities itself remains suspect. This can only be overcome if decisions are timely and procedures for acquisition are fast-tracked. Also, financial support should be sufficient with systems which do not call for a lapse of financial resources, once allotted. Without higher allocation, the armed forces may be unable to reach even the first level of transformation they seek.

Managing expenditure

•Not just higher allocation, management of expenditure also needs a complete revamp. Amid the focus on prevention of potential corruption, the larger picture of timely and optimum capability development has been ignored. Arguably, limited leakages could still be acceptable if timeliness of delivery is achieved even as more efficient procedures are implemented.

📰 Kailadevi tiger births a pointer to space crunch

Overpopulation in Ranthambore forces the big cats to often move to the adjacent wildlife reserve

•The birth of two tiger cubs in the Kailadevi wildlife sanctuary of Rajasthan's Karauli district recently has gladdened wildlife enthusiasts across the country, but it also points to a space crunch in the wildlife habitats which has forced the big cats to move out of the main area of Ranthambore National Park on their own.

•Tigress T-92 was spotted with two cubs, both about three and a half months old, at Ninder Ki Khoh near Mandrayal last week. The tiger cubs have been born in Kailadevi after nearly three decades. The four-and-a-half-year-old T-92 and male T-72, also known as Sultan, with whom it mated, are among the four tigers that have moved from Ranthambhore to Kailadevi.

Territorial disputes

•Forest authorities say overpopulation of tigers in Ranthambore National Park had led to territorial disputes, because of which the big cats were making frequent movements to the adjacent Kailadevi wildlife reserve, which had a size of 676 sq. km. T-72 migrated from Sultanpur area of Ranthambore to Mandrayal, when it was threatened by another tiger.

•The area of new births comprises scrub forest having isolated water sources and is surrounded by villagers and livestock settled in isolated pockets. Located in the Vindhya hill zone, the wildlife reserve has a rocky terrain with slopes, ravines and cave-like depressions, all clad with scanty shrubs and bushes. The banyan and peepal trees offer shade and shelter to tigers.

•A Ranthambore tigress has given litter outside the main national park area for the first time. Kailadevi's area has been officially included in about 400 sq. km area of Sawai Madhopur district's Ranthambore to develop it as a national park with more than 1,000 sq. km area.

Lacking support system

•Tourism and Wildlife Society of India honorary secretary Harsh Vardhan said here on Tuesday that the migration of tigers was a “clear indication” that Ranthambore lacked the basic support system for being administered as a designated tiger reserve. The national park had insufficient forest staff, he said.

•However, the birth of tiger cubs in Kailadevi had proved that tigers could live along with the villagers and their livestock in a habitat which did not offer much of the natural prey base of sambar, spotted deer, wild boar, etc., said Mr. Vardhan. “As Ranthambore's main area is unable to accommodate newborn cubs, tigers are exploring new places for their families,” he said.

•Earlier this month, Ranthambore's male tiger T-91 was relocated to the protected Mukundara Hills Tiger Reserve in Kota district. The tiger had been exploring new territories and living in the peripheral forests near Bundi for the last few months.



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